- Here I present: F. Scott Fitzgerald (1896 – 1940), “The Great Gatsby”, 1925.
F. Scott Fitzgerald wrote four (4) autobiographical fictions from 1925 to 1934, of the Jazz Age. - F. Scott Fitzgerald visted the Sellbach Hotel in Louisville, Kentucky; and, the Sellbach Hotel is shown here with cars having “ganster whitewall” tires parked in front. Louisville “spaghetti junction” is shown BELOW. Louisville “spaghetti junction” refers to the highway roads at the river front.


Metro buses of Louisville are designated by number & route-name as shown BELOW.
- Here I presented: F. Scott Fitzgerald, “The Great Gatsby”, 1925. George Remus is credited as the direct inspiration for “The Great Gatsby” protagonist Jay Gatsby.
SUMMARY.
Set in the Jazz Age on Long Island, New York City, the novel depicts first-person narrator of Nick Carraway’s interactions with mysterious millionaire Jay Gatsby and Gatsby’s obsession to with his former lover Daisy Buchanan.
- Churchill Downs Racetrack is accessible by TARC buses shown ABOVE & BELOW using the number: one (1), two (2), four (4), six (6) and twenty-nine (29) TARC buses.
- Again, F. Scott Fitzgerald, “The Great Gatsby”, 1925 was modeled on gangsters: betting on horse races, bootleg whiskey, and Sellbach Hotel party lifestyle of Jazz Age Louisville.
- George Remus was the model for Jay Gatsby; and, his lifestyle has no moral value as an American autobiographical fiction.